The Federal Reserve Bank of New York reported this week that auto loan delinquencies increased during the third quarter and noted that auto finance companies continued to load up subprime loans as they labored to keep the boom in car sales afloat again this year.

The increase in auto-loan delinquencies was a rather modest 2.4% in the quarter ending Sept. 30, compared with 2.3% in the second quarter ending June 30, according to the Center for Microeconomic Data’s Quarterly Report on Household Debt and Credit.

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The report also said that total consumer debt increased by $116 billion or 0.9% to $12.96 trillion in the third quarter of 2017.

“Delinquency flows across several debt types climbed this quarter, including for auto loans,” said Wilbert van der Klaauw, senior vice president at the New York Fed.

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Finance companies are taking more subprime loans in order to keep the sales boom going.

Auto loan originations were at $150.6 billion, up slightly from the previous quarter, marking the second highest level in more than a decade, the report from The New York Fed also noted.

On the other hand, mortgage balances and originations increased, and the median credit scores of borrowers for new mortgages increased slightly.

In addition, in contrast to auto lending, the share of mortgage balances that were 90 or more days delinquent continued to improve, printing at 1.4% in the third quarter, down from 1.7% at the beginning of 2017, and substantially improved from the 8.9% high reached in 2010.

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The report is based on data from the New York Fed’s Consumer Credit Panel, a nationally representative sample of individual- and household-level debt and credit records drawn from anonymized Equifax credit data.